Jack Kerouac
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2022
- Messages
- 872
There are a lot of opinions currently about Disney and the experiences being offered in the parks being just one big cash grab after another. But I am beginning to believe it doesn’t matter.
What matters is living a rich life full of joy. And for a lot of us, Disney provides us with some of that joy. I know it did, does, and will, for me. 30+ years of wonderful memories with my parents, siblings, wife, kids, and my parents with my wife and kids. In fact, I’m planning on Disney taking more money from me than I ever imagined just two years ago. Once my wife and my sons visited for their first time last April, I realized Disney will provide us with a lifetime of joy and memories, because it brings us together.
I would like to imagine every single one of us would ideally like to live a full, rich life, and Disney is likely a part of that rich life (otherwise, why are you on this website?) Doing Disney might mean blowing out our wallets George Constanza-style on one bucket list-like trip. Others can spend even more per trip many times over and not blink an eye. And for others, it’s done economically. I’ve witnessed it done by people with the means for more but are content with less, and they still choose to visit Disney.
Disney is accessible to many people across the economic spectrum, just because there are so many options provided by Disney and other companies centered around Disney. Supporting Disney is also supporting small businesses and individuals directly and indirectly. By using these ancillary businesses, you help those people directly. But even if you don’t, by visiting Disney, you keep those small businesses afloat because Disney is afloat.
Life requires us to spend money. Today sadly, that money goes less far now then it did before. But that Mickey pretzel and cheese costs less than a pretzel and cheese at our local zoo. The money grab is everywhere, not just Disney. Corporations everywhere have long been designed to serve the shareholders, not the stakeholders, and the only time the customer is right is when the company can use that leverage to extract more cash from the customer over a long-term relationship.
I’m skeptical of all businesses, individuals, and everyone and everything in between. But I am willing myself forward to provide my boys with some great experiences while they are young. A lot of them will be at Disney. A lot of them will be at a YMCA family camp each fall. And almost all of them will be because I chose to spend the money to take the trip, instead of gifting them the money after I’m dead. After 15+ years of working with older clients and their kids, the majority of people prefer memories with their loved ones to money from their loved ones. At least the ones deserving of the money.
And yes, I’m still saving for my retirement and my boys’ college, if you were concerned.
Create the memories while you can. Life is lived just once and our kids and grandkids are young just once. My eight-year old is already talking of a Time Machine to take him back to when he was two, and all I want is for him to enjoy his childhood while he still has it. You get to be a child just once. Enjoy it when you’re young or while those you love are young. Whether or not it’s Disney-related, just know your kids and grandkids want the memories, not the money. And it’s not just Disney that asks for, and takes, your money.
But if you’re still skeptical of Disney and/or me, just buy Disney stock to hedge your bet. Like I did. And I did for my kids. But really, I just want Disney to do well so my kids and their future kids can experience the joy Disney has brought me over the years.
What matters is living a rich life full of joy. And for a lot of us, Disney provides us with some of that joy. I know it did, does, and will, for me. 30+ years of wonderful memories with my parents, siblings, wife, kids, and my parents with my wife and kids. In fact, I’m planning on Disney taking more money from me than I ever imagined just two years ago. Once my wife and my sons visited for their first time last April, I realized Disney will provide us with a lifetime of joy and memories, because it brings us together.
I would like to imagine every single one of us would ideally like to live a full, rich life, and Disney is likely a part of that rich life (otherwise, why are you on this website?) Doing Disney might mean blowing out our wallets George Constanza-style on one bucket list-like trip. Others can spend even more per trip many times over and not blink an eye. And for others, it’s done economically. I’ve witnessed it done by people with the means for more but are content with less, and they still choose to visit Disney.
Disney is accessible to many people across the economic spectrum, just because there are so many options provided by Disney and other companies centered around Disney. Supporting Disney is also supporting small businesses and individuals directly and indirectly. By using these ancillary businesses, you help those people directly. But even if you don’t, by visiting Disney, you keep those small businesses afloat because Disney is afloat.
Life requires us to spend money. Today sadly, that money goes less far now then it did before. But that Mickey pretzel and cheese costs less than a pretzel and cheese at our local zoo. The money grab is everywhere, not just Disney. Corporations everywhere have long been designed to serve the shareholders, not the stakeholders, and the only time the customer is right is when the company can use that leverage to extract more cash from the customer over a long-term relationship.
I’m skeptical of all businesses, individuals, and everyone and everything in between. But I am willing myself forward to provide my boys with some great experiences while they are young. A lot of them will be at Disney. A lot of them will be at a YMCA family camp each fall. And almost all of them will be because I chose to spend the money to take the trip, instead of gifting them the money after I’m dead. After 15+ years of working with older clients and their kids, the majority of people prefer memories with their loved ones to money from their loved ones. At least the ones deserving of the money.
And yes, I’m still saving for my retirement and my boys’ college, if you were concerned.
Create the memories while you can. Life is lived just once and our kids and grandkids are young just once. My eight-year old is already talking of a Time Machine to take him back to when he was two, and all I want is for him to enjoy his childhood while he still has it. You get to be a child just once. Enjoy it when you’re young or while those you love are young. Whether or not it’s Disney-related, just know your kids and grandkids want the memories, not the money. And it’s not just Disney that asks for, and takes, your money.
But if you’re still skeptical of Disney and/or me, just buy Disney stock to hedge your bet. Like I did. And I did for my kids. But really, I just want Disney to do well so my kids and their future kids can experience the joy Disney has brought me over the years.
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